It was a 1985 computer selling $300 retail in 1991 packaged with $300 retail CD-ROM. Commodore got the crazy idea to try and sell this "the whole is less than the sum of its parts" at $1000 because black case and remote control! Nobody got fooled. Zero effort went into trying to cost optimize it, or even make it a desirable product. It was as ridiculous as Philips mega flop CD-I shipping similarly bad internals at same price point.
Never seen a CDTV-CR in real. I have an original with keyboard, mouse, diskdrive and remote. I did like the device. Somehow the CD playback sounded better than my Sony CD player, but very clunky with the caddy and somewhat unintuitive interface.
I read the linked page and googled here name. I found a very detailed and intesting page ( to me ) at
Commodore International Historical Society Link below )
Gail Wellington: far more than just a herder of CATS and ... https://commodore.international/2021/11/21/gail-wellington-f...
Looks to be an excellent page, excellent information about Commodore computer history too.
>The CDTV was a brilliant product for its time.
It was a 1985 computer selling $300 retail in 1991 packaged with $300 retail CD-ROM. Commodore got the crazy idea to try and sell this "the whole is less than the sum of its parts" at $1000 because black case and remote control! Nobody got fooled. Zero effort went into trying to cost optimize it, or even make it a desirable product. It was as ridiculous as Philips mega flop CD-I shipping similarly bad internals at same price point.
I think there was at least one iteration of the CDTV with somewhat lower-cost internals though.
Never seen a CDTV-CR in real. I have an original with keyboard, mouse, diskdrive and remote. I did like the device. Somehow the CD playback sounded better than my Sony CD player, but very clunky with the caddy and somewhat unintuitive interface.
@dang - black bar time?